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Japan’s Government turns to Private Companies for Help

The Japanese government is pleading with private companies to help supply people evacuated from around the Fukushima nuclear plant, with food, water and other supplies.

This is a clear indicator that the Japanese government is not prepared for such an emergency, despite the international perception of Japan’s high level of disaster readiness.

TEPCO Pleading with Military to Make more Water Drops

TEPCO (Tokyo Electric Power Company) is asking the JSDF to make another try at dropping water on the Fukushima Daiichi plant.

The Japanese Self Defense Forces stopped after radiation levels, above the plant,  got too high.

Plant workers are trying to prevent a massive melt down of fuel rods (1,000+), which have overheated and caught fire.

Massive Melt Down if Fuel Rods Can Not be Cooled

There are more than 1,000 spent fuel rods at Fukushima Daiichi plant.  So far attempts to cool the rods down with water is failing.

To show how hard it is to cool down spent fuel rods: It takes 3 to 4 years under normal conditions.

The large amount of spent fuel rods, at the plant,  means a massive melt down could occur if temperatures can not be brought down.  As one U.S. nuclear engineer said, even a fuel rod fire would be like “…Chernobyl on steroids.”

No wonder many countries are telling their people to get out of Japan.

U.S. Military issuing Iodide Pills to Aircrews, U.S. taking Radiation Readings

The United States military is issuing Potassium Iodide pills to helicopter crews flying operations in Japan.  The crews take the pills before their missions.

U.S. nuclear experts now in Japan will start taking their own radiation readings.  Officially this is to “help” Japan with the Fukushima nuclear disaster, but I think it’s because U.S. officials don’t trust what TEPCo, and Japanese officials, are reporting.

Survivors being Stressed by Lack of Info, Confusing Reports, being Forced to Move

An NHK interview has revealed failures in Japan’s emergency plans. Possibly lack of planning, or implementation.

Survivors are being stressed by confusing reports, lack of reliable information, and due to being forced to move from one shelter to another.

Many survivors from smaller cities and towns say no emergency drills were ever practiced where they lived.  Others say the emergency drills they took part in never addressed anything like the current situation.  This contradicts the accepted belief that Japan is the best prepared for natural disasters.

Survivors say it has become clear to them that they can’t trust what their officials are saying, especially since the survivors have witnessed, or experienced things that don’t match the official statements.

Survivors being moved from one shelter to another is the result of lack of food and water, fear of radiation exposure, and lack of heating capabilities.  Temperatures in northern Honshu are still around freezing.

Using Water to Cool Rods is just a Time Buying Action

In an NHK interview, an official said that using water on the Fukushima fuel rods is meant to buy time, until other alternatives to cooling the rods could be figured out.

Plant officials say they’re going to attempt to use boric acid.  They’ve received a sample from Korea.  If the test is successful South Korean officials say they are prepared to send the bulk of their boric acid to Japan.

Officials Continue with Contradictory Statements

Officials with TEPCO, said radiation levels from Fukushima Daiichi plant are down. This is contradictory because they also say that they can not put out the spent fuel rod fires.

I noticed that they continue to give radiation levels from specific points around the plant, like the “main gate” to the factory.  I believe the radiation checks are being done at ground level.  Fuel rod fires, along with the reactor explosions, spew radiation up into the air, where it is carried away by the winds.  At the beginning the winds were blowing eastward, towards Hawaii.

Chinese analysts have pointed out that no one is checking radiation levels at sea. Also, the U.S. Navy moved away from the area after two helicopters were hit by a radiation cloud.  Also, it is clear that radiation levels are high around the reactors because on Tuesday all workers were pulled back for a short time, and the JSDF had to stop dropping water by air because of high radiation levels.

Winds have changed several times, blowing to the south, then to the west, and then to the southeast.  Wind speed and direction would also affect radiation level readings, depending on where they are taken.

I conclude that the claims of safe radiation levels are misleading, due to the actions of those plant workers, and military personnel, trying to suppress the fuel rod fires. As well as to the way radiation readings are being taken and reported.  Also, the statements made by government officials regarding staying indoors, and not drinking even the tap water, is an indicator of how bad the situation is.

Toyota stopping operations in United States

Toyota announced that not only is it halting operations in Japan (due to the Fukushima disaster), but in the United States as well.

This is because most of the parts used in U.S. factories come from Japan, and parts production has come to a halt.

South Korea agrees to send Boric Acid to Japan

South Korea is willing to send Japan 53 tons of Boric Acid to Japan, to help fight the nuclear disaster.

That amount of boric acid is almost all that South Korea has.

Boric acid is an antiseptic, insecticide, flame retardant, and it’s used in nuclear power plants to control the fission rate of uranium.

TEPCO officials want to use it at the Fukushima Daiichi plant.  They said they will test a one kilogram sample from Korea on Wednesday.

Airlines adjusting to Japan disaster

Airlines from around the world are adjusting to the situation in Japan.

Many airlines are shifting to airports that are further away from Tokyo.

A photographer who flew to Tokyo from London said “I’ve never been on such an empty flight. It was a (300-seat Boeing) 777 with barely 20 people on board.”

Flights out of Japan are packed.  More and more foreign governments are telling their staff to leave, as well as foreign companies.